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Found 67 result(s)
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The Libraries offer members of the Université de Montréal community the opportunity to publish their research data in a Dataverse repository space
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Dataverse for faculty, researchers, and students at St. Francis Xavier University or affiliated institutions. Hosted by Borealis.
The Carleton University Data Repository Dataverse is the research data repository for Carleton University. It is managed by the Data Services in the MacOdrum Library. The repository also houses the MacOdrum Library Dataverse Collection which contains numerous public opinion polls.
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The Concordia University Dataverse is a research data repository for Concordia faculty, students, and staff. Files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers.
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KU Leuven RDR (pronounced "RaDaR") is KU Leuven's Research Data Repository, built on Dataverse.org - open source repository software built by Harvard University. RDR gives KU Leuven researchers a one-stop platform to upload, describe, and share their research data, conveniently and with support from university staff.
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GRO.data is a research data repository for the Göttingen Campus. Belonging researchers can use it for free. It serves different purposes such as: to simply preserve datasets, to keep track of changes across several versions, to share data with colleagues, to make data itself publicly available, to receive a persistent identifier upon publications.
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The Tecnológico de Monterrey's Data Hub offers Open Data generated by our researchers and other initiatives. This initiative is sponsored by both the Living Lab & Data Hub of the Institute for the Future of Education (IFE and the Tecnologico de Monterrey's Research Office. This repository is organized by Institutes and Schools.
The Arizona State University (ASU) Research Data Repository provides a platform for ASU-affiliated researchers to share, preserve, cite, and make research data accessible and discoverable. The ASU Research Data Repository provides a permanent digital identifier for research data, which complies with data sharing policies. The repository is powered by the Dataverse open-source application, developed and used by Harvard University. Both the ASU Research Data Repository and the KEEP Institutional Repository are managed by the ASU Library to ensure research produced at Arizona State University is discoverable and accessible to the global community.
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The University of Northern British Columbia Dataverse is a research data repository for research data from UNBC researchers. Files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers. The platform makes it possible for researchers to deposit data, create appropriate metadata, and version documents as they work. Researchers can choose to make content available publicly, to specific individuals, or to keep it locked.
In order to meet the needs of research data management for Peking University. The PKU library cooperate with the NSFC-PKU data center for management science, PKU science and research department, PKU social sciences department to jointly launch the Peking University Open Research Data Platform. PKU Open research data provides preservation, management and distribution services for research data. It encourage data owner to share data and data users to reuse data.
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The University of Regina Library offers our institution's researchers the opportunity to store (and share, if appropriate) their research data in our University of Regina Dataverse.
The CBU Dataverse is a research data repository for Cape Breton University. Files are held securely on Canadian servers, and can be made openly accessible to further research, gain citations and promote our world class research.
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Welcome to the National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University Dataverse research data knowledge management website, where you can learn how to obtain, upload, cite and explore research data in the National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University Dataverse.
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The SMU Dataverse is a research data repository for our faculty, students, and staff. Files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers. Researchers can choose to make content available publicly, to specific individuals, or to keep it locked.
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UWinnipeg Research Data Repository accepts research data and datasets that have been created by researchers and research groups at the University of Winnipeg. Files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers. The UWinnipeg Data Repository accepts finalized datasets that are ready for publication and sharing.
The Harvard Dataverse Repository is a free data repository open to all researchers from any discipline, both inside and outside of the Harvard community, where you can share, archive, cite, access, and explore research data. Each individual Dataverse collection is a customizable collection of datasets (or a virtual repository) for organizing, managing, and showcasing datasets.
The University of Toronto Dataverse is a research data repository for our faculty, students, and staff. Files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers. Researchers can choose to make content available publicly, to specific individuals, or to restrict access.
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The Common Research Data Repository (Deposita Dados) is a database for archiving, publishing, disseminating, preserving and sharing digital research data and its mission is to promote, support and facilitate the adoption of open access to the datasets of Brazilian researchers linked to scientific institutions that do not yet have their own research data repositories and/or of Brazilian researchers who have executed their datasets through scientific collaboration in foreign teaching and research institutions.
In keeping with the open data policies of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA) has launched the CSISA Data Repository to ensure public accessibility to key data sets, including crop cut data- directly observed, crop yield estimates, on-station and on-farm research trial data and socioeconomic surveys. CSISA is a science-driven and impact-oriented regional initiative for increasing the productivity of cereal-based cropping systems in Bangladesh, India and Nepal, thus improving food security and farmers’ livelihoods. CSISA generates data that is of value and interest to a diverse audience of researchers, policymakers and the public. CSISA’s data repository is hosted on Dataverse, an open source web application developed at Harvard University to share, preserve, cite, explore and analyze research data. CSISA’s repository contains rich datasets, including on-station trial data from 2009–17 about crop and resource management practices for sustainable future cereal-based cropping systems. Collection of this data occurred during the long-term, on-station research trials conducted at the Indian Council of Agricultural Research – Research Complex for the Eastern Region in Bihar, India. The data include information on agronomic management for the sustainable intensification of cropping systems, mechanization, diversification, futuristic approaches to sustainable intensification, long-term effects of conservation agriculture practices on soil health and the pest spectrum. Additional trial data in the repository includes nutrient omission plot technique trials from Bihar, eastern Uttar Pradesh and Odisha, India, covering 2012–15, which help determine the indigenous nutrient supplying ability of the soil. This data helps develop precision nutrient management approaches that would be most effective in different types of soils. CSISA’s most popular dataset thus far includes crop cut data on maize in Odisha, India and rice in Nepal. Crop cut datasets provide ground-truthed yield estimates, as well as valuable information on relevant agronomic and socioeconomic practices affecting production practices and yield. A variety of research data on wheat systems are also available from Bangladesh and India. Additional crop cut data will also be coming online soon. Cropping system-related data and socioeconomic data are in the repository, some of which are cross-listed with a Dataverse run by the International Food Policy Research Institute. The socioeconomic datasets contain baseline information that is crucial for technology targeting, as well as to assess the adoption and performance of CSISA-supported technologies under smallholder farmers’ constrained conditions, representing the ultimate litmus test of their potential for change at scale. Other highly interesting datasets include farm composition and productive trajectory information, based on a 20-year panel dataset, and numerous wheat crop cut and maize nutrient omission trial data from across Bangladesh.
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Policy-relevant observational studies for population health equity and responsible development. High-quality statistical information adult and children's health from the UN's Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) program and UNICEF's Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS). These datasets contain longitudinal information dating back to 1995 or 1999 for a series of social policies in up to 193 UN countries. DHS data variables include fertility, family planning and nutritional status for women aged 15-49 and young children, as well as demographic information on household structure, employment, education, wealth, and place of residence. MICS data includes information on nutritional status and child mortality, medical care during the antenatal and postnatal periods, and sibling maternal mortality, among others.